Michael Kolenut

About M Kolenut

Michael E. Kolenut, President of Lincoln Landscaping Inc, is a certified Organic Consultant. A NOFA registered Organic Company, I have the distinct honor to teach a leg of the NJ Organic Land Care program at Rutgers University to other landscapers who are trying to learn a better way to serve their clients. Come and partner with us to do the right thing for you, your children, your pets, and your community. Our company mission is to get these organics out to you, the client at a fair, most times cost neutral with a chemical program

Blue Cohosh

Blue Cohosh (Caulophyllum thalictroides) is a unique woodland wildflower native to eastern North America and is treasured for its lacy blue-green foliage and deep blue berries. This beautiful shade garden plant prefers a soil with abundant organic matter from decaying leaves and consistent moisture.

By |2023-03-22T11:35:55-04:00March 22nd, 2023|Landscaping, Native Plants, Sustainable Landscaping|

Ecological Gardening

When you think of your garden beds do you yearn for a garden requiring less maintenance and water? A garden with a more diverse selection of wildflowers and pollinator plants with a greater biodiversity all the while having a healthier growing soil or growing medium. If so, then ecological gardening may be right for you. In the past, we have asked one thing of our gardens: that they be pretty. Now they have to support life, sequester carbon, feed pollinators and manage water.

By |2023-02-01T11:34:38-05:00February 1st, 2023|Gardening, Landscaping, Native Plants, Organics, Sustainable Landscaping|

Seersucker Sedge

Have a shaded garden bed area within a woodland setting that has a moist, fertile soil? Or maybe a shady slope area with somewhat drier soil. Well this lovely, lime green sedge, which is also a native grass of the Eastern United States, will do just fine within those growing medium parameters. Seersucker Sedge (Carex plantaginea, Zones 4–8) has eye-catching foliage and a mounded form about 1 foot in width with a height of 6 to 12 inches.

By |2023-01-19T16:24:43-05:00January 19th, 2023|Gardening, Landscaping, Native Plants, Sustainable Landscaping|

Pennies From Heaven

Environmentally, there are numerous benefits to using rain barrels. Water collected in a rain barrel would otherwise run or drain off the roof and become stormwater runoff, which is problematic. When excess water is directed into storm-drains the streams that they feed into are subjected to sudden surges of water, causing erosion and flooding. Unlike treated water from your tap, rainwater is free of chlorine and chloramines, chemicals added to water to make it safe for human consumption. Rainwater is also free of salt, which can build up in the roots of your plants when they’re watered with tap water.

By |2023-01-17T13:18:36-05:00January 17th, 2023|Gardening, Landscaping, Native Plants, Sustainable Landscaping|
Go to Top